Mexican agriculture in crisis

February’s freezing fury has left a path of crumpled crops, pummeled harvests and dashed dreams in the countryside of northern Mexico. Hardest hit was the northwestern state of Sinaloa, known as the “Bread Basket of Mexico,” where about 750,000 acres of corn crops were reported destroyed after unusually cold temperatures blanketed the north of the country in January and early February. Sinaloa is among Mexico’s major producers of white corn, the variety of maize used to make staple tortillas. Heriberto Felix Guerra, secretary of the federal Secretariat for Social Development (SEDESOL), called the weather-related losses “the worst disaster” in the history of Sinaloa.

Altogether, more than 1.5 million acres of corn, vegetable, citrus and other crops were either damaged or destroyed in Sinaloa, with a preliminary economic loss of approximately one billion dollars. The source of about 30% of Mexico’s grains and vegetables, Sinaloa also exports food products to the United States.

Other northern states also experienced the widespread destruction of winter crops. In Sonora, more than 130,000 acres were reported lost, including 45 percent of the acreage planted in winter wheat. In Tamaulipas, nearly 800,000 acres in corn and sorghum were impacted, while crop losses in Chihuahua were calculated in the $100 million ballpark.

Suddenly, corn is looking like gold. Early in the weekend, armed men reportedly robbed between 18 and 20 tons of corn seed from a truck on the highway between the Sinaloa cities of Culiacan and Navolato.

The administration of Mexican President Felipe Calderón is pulling out the stops to counter the agricultural crisis. “This is not a common catastrophe,” Calderón said in a Feb. 11 speech in Culiacan. “It is not a routine crop loss, if you will,” but truly an emergency situation.”

Speaking in an urgent and commanding tone, the Mexican president said producers had 15 days to replant their crops. He said it was incumbent for government agencies to cut the red-tape and get insurance payments, credit, seeds and technical support rolling out the door and into the hands of farmers.

As a trying week drew to a close, the federal Secretariat of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries announced it would release $100 million in emergency aid, while SEDESOL said about 150,000 farmworkers would benefit from a three-week, temporary employment program designed to pay each worker $11 per day for clearing and replanting fields. According to SEDESOL, other forms of assistance will be given to migrant workers from the states of Oaxaca, Guerrero and Michoacán who labor on the export-oriented farms of the north.

Meanwhile, as crop damage assessments began flowing in, prices for tortillas continued on the upswing, reportedly reaching 13 pesos per kilo in places like Chilpancingo, Guerrero. The price is more than 50% higher than the eight-peso ceiling the Calderón administration pledged in 2007.

A Chilpancingo housewife, Estela Segura said the price hikes were the same story every year, affecting people “who have the least” like herself. Nieves Barrientos, another resident of Chilpancingo, contended that if prices for tortillas and other basic products keep rising, so should wages.

The agricultural crisis could have important political ramifications, as Mexico’s political forces are increasingly positioning their players for “The Big One”: the 2012 presidential election.

As was the case with previous media coverage of the extreme cold that whipped the dithers out of northern Mexico this winter, virtually no mention was made in the latest round of news reports on any possible links between human-caused climate change and the present disaster.

From Frontera NorteSur, Feb. 12

See our last posts on Mexico and peak food.

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  1. Ford Foundation’s $430,000 “Mexico Information” Grants
    Coincidentally, to apparently provide the same kind of news and information about Mexico contained in the above article that WW4 Report has been providing without foundation grants, the New York City-based Ford Foundation (whose board of trustees includes a Goldman Sachs executive)gave a Mexico-related grant to the National Security Archives Fund and a grant to Article 19 Research and Information Centre on Censorship in 2010. The grant to the National Security Archives Fund, totalling $200,000, is “to use the right to information to promote accountability & transparency in Mexico & across Latin America, focusing on military, security & migration issues & providing evidence for human rights cases.” The Ford Foundation grant to Article 19 Research and Information Centre on Censorship, totalling $230,000, is “For the Mexico chapter, in partnership with civil society, organization and migration experts, to develop and begin implementation of a joint communications strategy on migration and related policies.”

    Ironically, this grant money is obtained by the Ford Foundation from the dividends it earns from its multi-billion dollar portfolio, which includes corporate stock in many of the same U.S. transnational corporations that exploit workers and consumers in Mexico in 2011.